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The winds of war have changed direction in Ukraine.

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29.03.2026  ~  Trần Đình Hoành QUORA Truth About Russia  ·  Posted by  Tomas Holst Mar 14 The winds of war have changed direction in Ukraine. The illegal Russian offensive war against Ukraine has now been ongoing for over four years and continues with no end in sight. But the beginning of 2026 has been positive for Ukrainian forces. According to the think tank Institute for the Study of War, for the first time in two and a half years, Ukraine is taking more territory than it is losing to Russia, “A turning point in the war”  Earlier this year, Russia lost access to Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite service – and has since had serious problems with the communication and command of Russian forces. Ukraine has taken advantage of this and is advancing in Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia, among others. – It is a stage in the war that clearly shows Ukraine Ukraine’s capacity and that it continues to do everything to defend its country against the Russia...

Ukraine’s drone army has done the incredible

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Russia hoped winter would bring Ukraine to its knees. Here’s why it didn’t. By Max Boot, The Washington Post ,  Today ,  March 30, 2026 at 6:00 a.m. EDT A heavy strike drone of the 422nd Unmanned Systems Regiment of the Ukrainian army flies with an attached air bomb over a training ground, in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region, on March 23. (Stringer/Reuters)  KYIV — When I first visited Kyiv in May 2023, Ukraine’s capital experienced what was then one of the largest air attacks of the war: Russia fired 25 missiles and nine drones. I could hear the blasts outside my hotel room as Ukrainian air defenses shot down all the projectiles. Last week, during my third visit to wartime Ukraine, Russia set another shameful record by firing 30 missiles and nearly 1,000 Shahed drones during a 24-hour period (March 23-24).  The radical expansion in the size of air attacks over the past three years is a sign that Russia’s war of aggression shows no sign of abating. But Ukraine, while fa...

How Russia Weaponized the Cold Ukrainian Winter

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Inside one Kyiv neighborhood as it braved the harshest conditions since World War II.   Svitlana, a 66-year-old resident of one of Kyiv’s Soviet-designed apartment blocks, at the entrance to her building in early February.   Image: Finbarr O'Reilly for The New York Times  By  C.J. Chivers   , The New York Times , March 30, 2026 C.J. Chivers worked in Kyiv, Ukraine, in January and February to report this article.   In Troieshchyna, a residential neighborhood at Kyiv’s northeastern edge, the slide into darkness and cold began during a single night early this year. For much of the war, Russia had been targeting the energy infrastructure in Ukraine’s capital. But after each strike, fires were doused, debris was cleaned up and power and heat were mostly restored. That changed overnight on Jan. 8, when explosions thundered across the city and the descent into sustained, frigid misery began.   In original article: "Listen to this article, read by Ro...